T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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625.1 | Too much or too brutal? | PUZZLE::GUEST_TMP | HOME, in spite of my ego! | Thu Jan 14 1988 17:05 | 12 |
| ABsolutely!
One of the most important things we need to consider in our
lives is our impact on others. While it is ultimately mandatory
that we be honest, this means, in my opinion, COMPLETE, TOTAL,
BRUTAL HONESTY...with YOURSELF. If total honesty has a negative
impact on others, then some alternative may be more appropriate.
This from Lazaris: "Be brutally honest with yourself; be tactfully
truthful with others."
Frederick
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625.2 | my philosophy | INK::KALLIS | Has anybody lost a shoggoth? | Thu Jan 14 1988 17:06 | 11 |
| Be rigidly honest to yourself about yourself.
Be honest to others; if total honesty hurts, and "modified honesty"
(e.g., a little white lie) brings comfort, be kind.
If you would help a seeker find his or her way, do so through total
honesty. Anything else is a barrier to truth.
Honesty includes the ability to say, "I don't know."
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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625.3 | An honest answer | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Bruce is *still* on the loose | Thu Jan 14 1988 17:08 | 19 |
|
Honesty must be tempered with tact and sensitivity.
You don't always want to tell your SO precisely what you think
of their new clothes, or their latest attempt at gourmet cooking.
You don't always want to tell your boss what you think of
his/her latest idea.
You may honestly think that the clothes would look better on a baboon,
and the meal should be fed to the cats, and your boss's latest project
will make money for IBM - but use some discretion when you tell
them these thoughts.
Often people use "telling the truth" as an excuse to get back at
or hurt the other person by tearing them down. That's not honesty
in my book.
-bs
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625.4 | Right to Privacy | FLOWER::JASNIEWSKI | | Fri Jan 15 1988 10:04 | 13 |
|
Honesty can stop at someone's right to privacy, that is, every
little detail of one's life need not be exposed to another in the
effort to be "totally" honest.
Detailing every little thing can lead to an unproductive
confrontation that wastes energy and can thwart something that
otherwise in all actuality may be just fine.
I can easily think of an example in the contex of a relationship.
You might not want to reveal "all" the details of your past
relationships to your current "SO". Why should you have to? For
the sake of being "totally" honest? I dont think so...
Joe Jas
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625.5 | No rule of action not even honesty is perfect | RANGLY::DUCHARME_GEO | | Fri Jan 15 1988 11:31 | 8 |
| Honesty is very important, imagine the world without it.Like knowledge
it can be used for good or bad.Being honest is similar to any other action
we take, it will have negative as well as positive effects.The best we can
do is to try to act for positive results and hope we have perceived the
situation clearly enough so that the negative results will be minimal.
George D.
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625.6 | Truth and loving | LEDS::BATES | | Fri Jan 15 1988 13:08 | 15 |
|
I find it difficult to think of honesty as brutal, any more than
any means that we use to describe our current reality is in and
of itself brutal. Being truthful/honest with ourselves, acknowledging
the good and the not-so-good, is the way we can define where we
are, and using the information is how we get to the next stage in
our development. Thus, to be honest to ourselves is to be ultimately
kind and loving, providing us the means to growth and fulfillment.
Truthfulness should never be used as a weapon, as a means to divide
and separate us. But the truth, told in love and with the desire
to support someone else in his or her growth, is never inappropriate.
Gloria
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625.7 | "Did I tell myself THAT???" | BSS::BLAZEK | Dancing with My Self | Sun Jan 17 1988 11:14 | 76 |
| The level of honesty which we portray and give to another person
is relative to the depth which we trust that person.
There are many ways to be dishonest. Outright lying, omission of
facts, outwardly accepting a belief you don't really accept but
don't want to argue, doing what you don't want to do, manipulating
data to suit your own purpose, pretending to like opera because
your friend won two tickets and absolutely loves it, etc. etc.
There is also a difference between being "brutally" honest with
yourself and your life's surroundings *to* yourself, being honest
about yourself to another person, and being "brutally" honest with
another person about *him/her* and his/her life's surroundings.
I won't be "brutally" honest with someone if I know it will hurt
them. I don't subscribe to the statement "I'm only telling you
this for your own good." (Frederick, I'm going sound like you for
a moment.) I watched a Lazaris tape this weekend and liked what
he said about love and honesty should not evoke guilt, pain, or a
self-ego satisfaction. When being honest with another person I
have to first consider *why* I am telling him/her this and what
affect it may have. Will it hurt him/her? Is it something they
can discover on their own?
A couple days ago I told a friend something about myself that upset
him. I didn't need to tell him, but wanted to share this. I was
being honest about myself, when to remain silent would have spared
him confusion and (a little bit of) anger. I made a mistake by not
thinking it through, I'm still sorry for hurting him, but I did
learn more about our relationship.
Sometimes it takes a try or two before you "feel" the person out
and discover their honesty threshold (i.e., can she take it if I
tell her I hate her cat). Tact and honesty play against each other
and *each* should be considered along with the subsequent possible
consequences when telling a person something or when deciding
*not* to tell a person something (i.e., will he find out I was in
the Bahamas when he really thought I was at DECworld).
Finding out someone you trust has lied to you is shattering. It
is vital (at least to me) to be truly lovingly honest with people
close to me, without causing hurt, anger, resentment, or tears.
Honesty is also saying "I'd rather not talk about it."
Example of what I consider to be unimportant "dishonesty": Some
days I want to run up and down the halls laughing with joy at
being alive (I know, it's scary) and hug all my friends until I
collapse from exhaustion. I'm a private person. If I'm asked
"how are you," 99% of the time I'll say "fine" or "great." Well,
if I'm feeling as described above I'm obviously doing a bit better
than that, but because I don't have the time to explain to them
*why* I'm floating near the ceiling I'll give a quick, generic
answer. In contrast, on my more mellow days I am, in effect,
being dishonest by saying I'm fine when really I'm awful because
my car broke down and I needed the money to pay off that secret
trip to the Bahamas. =;*)
Being honest with yourself is *essential* to furthering growth in
all aspects of your life. You can tell yourself you look terrible,
you've got a cruddy personality, you treat people like dirtballs,
and what will happen? For one thing, your self-image may be shot
and you may wallow in self-pity for a while, but eventually (and
hopefully) you will start working to improve these things.
Because you *can't* escape yourself. You can't say "Why did you
tell me this??!!??" and then run away from yourself never speaking
to yourself again. You are the only one who has to deal with the
consequences (whatever they may be) of self-honesty, because it is
*your* reality that you create and it is *your* reality that you
must reconcile with and change if it doesn't suit you any longer.
My vote: YES, you can be *too* honest with another person.
*NO* you can never be too honest with yourself.
Carla
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625.8 | A timely topic, to say the least. | CLUE::PAINTER | Remembering the Challenger | Mon Jan 18 1988 12:39 | 46 |
|
I had a conversation with a Dutch friend (who was living in the
US for 3 years on a DEC transfer) on this very topic a few years
ago. He observed that Americans in particular will completely twist
their observation around and say exactly the opposite of what they
are thinking. For example, he said that someone had approached
a coworker of his that was about 4 months pregnant. This person
hadn't seen her in quite some time, took one look at her and said,
"You are looking quite well, have you lost weight? He had a hard
time dealing with that one since that is so totally wrong and he
came right out and said to me that it was considered 'dishonest'
in his Dutch social frame of reference.
I have another friend I grew up with who, if receiving a gift that
she doesn't really want, will go *way out of her way* to protest that
it is the most wonderful and thoughtful gift and that she was
overjoyed at receiving such a wonderful gift, and on and on.......then
turn to me, lower her voice to a whisper and say, "Do you think it
would be possible for me to take this back to the store and return
it without the sales receipt because it is not of really good quality
and I won't really use it anyway, but I don't want to hurt the feelings
of the person who gave it to me. This is by no means an isolated
incident.
She has finally decided that this isn't the way she would like to live
from now on, because it really is dishonest, but it has been so
ingrained in her that this is the 'acceptable and social thing to do'
that she really doesn't know any other way (and from my observations,
most of her family members act the same way). I, on the other hand,
have no qualms whatsoever to tell someone that I'd rather exchange a
gift for something else, especially when a large sum of money was
spent.....but this sort of thing comes easy for me and therefore
I'm not much help to her.
Anybody have any good suggestions on how to help my friend modify her
behavior on her own and be more true to herself (and subsequently
to others) in this regard? I think that recognizing the problem is
the major first step, and she has taken that already, but she's not
quite sure how to go about changing a lifetime of acting a certain
way and would really like some good suggestions (books, tapes,
readings, etc.).
Thanks all!
Cindy
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625.9 | Is it true, necessary or kind? | CAMLOT::COFFMAN | Du Pont - Kemp, that's the Ticket | Wed Jan 20 1988 13:20 | 25 |
| Thank you all for responding to my query.
Until recently I never really made, for myself, a distinction
regarding honesty.
I probably fell in the category of brutally honest (thanks Carla) with
myself and to others. I have had two experiences, both of them in
Notes, where I have written something then thinging I should delete
the entry. Yet in my heart I felt is was true. In both cases I did
not delete the notes.
This awareness has helped me out.
There is a principle I'd like to share that I am much more aware of
as I proceed daily.
It is true,
Is it necessary,
Is it kind.
If these questions, when asked about a communication to someone else
come up yes, then I go with it. If I get a no or maybe, my reaffirmed
guidelines keep my mouth shut.
- Howard
|